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Schmitt ............................................................................................................................... 8 Teaching About Game Theory Margaret Ray ........................................................................................................................................ 21 Focusing on the Phillips Curve and Exchange Rates in Macroeconomics Rae Jean Goodman ............................................................................................................................ 33 Teaching About Foreign Exchange Mary Kohelis ........................................................................................................................................ 37 The Short Run and Long Run Phillips Curves Sue Weaver and Peggy Pride ....................................................................................................... 49 Contributors .................................................................................................................................................. 58 Contact Us ...................................................................................................................................................... 60 Important Note: The following set of materials is organized around a particular theme, or “special focus,” that reflects important topics in the AP Economics course. The materials are intended to provide teachers with resources and classroom ideas relating to these topics. The special focus, as well as the specific content of the materials, cannot and should not be taken as an indication that a particular topic will appear on the AP Exam. AP Economics: 2006–2007 Workshop Materials 1 Special Focus: Mastering Economic Thinking Skills Introduction Peggy Pride St. Louis University High School St. Louis, Missouri As editor of the project that produced the lessons contained in this package, I was charged with the task of deciding which topics in microeconomics and macroeconomics to assign to my very capable writers. From my years of experience on the AP Economics Development Committee, I knew that a few topics in each area were new and perplexing to both students and teachers. From my years of experience as an AP Economics teacher, I also knew that some topics needed either a fresh look or more coverage. The lessons included here are filled with ideas and activities to help develop the economic thinking skills of your students. A strong economics curriculum will include activities that help students see the connections between the concepts and feel comfortable with topics that are both easy and complex. • The essays introducing the micro- and macroeconomics lessons provide key background information on the placement of the lesson topics in the curriculum and their importance to the course as a whole. • The lesson plan on marginal thinking weaves the topic of marginal thinking into many aspects of your microeconomics course. It focuses on the role of marginalism in decision making for consumers, firms, and governments. Soon students will be chanting the mantra: MB, MU, MP, MC, MR, MRP, MRC, MSC, and MSB! • The lesson plan on game theory, a relatively new topic for the microeconomics curriculum, will challenge students to think in new ways about how firms make decisions. Further, this lesson will help them to see decision making in their own lives in an altered way. • The lesson plan on the Phillips curve, another challenging topic, provides a focused, specific set of materials to help you teach the topic in a clear, understandable way. Placing this lesson after the development of the AS/AD model will aid student understanding related to changes in AD and AS and how these changes affect the level of output, employment, and the price level. • The lesson plan on foreign exchange will assist you in clearly showing that the foreign exchange market is a two-sided demand/supply concept. When one nation demands another’s currency, the other nation must be willing to supply its own currency to trade. Sounds easy, but it is a complex idea to master. AP Economics: 2006–2007 Workshop Materials 3 Special Focus: Mastering Economic Thinking Skills The authors of these lessons are expert economic educators representing both secondary schools and universities. They were selected for their in-depth knowledge and skillful methods of presentation. I am proud to share their excellent lessons and essays, and I thank these authors for their high-quality work. All of the authors have created multiple- choice and free-response questions different from those that have appeared on past AP Exams. These questions will challenge your students and help in their preparation for the AP Exams. You will be well served if you adopt these materials for use in your class. The AP Economics Development Committee is ever vigilant in surveying representative colleges and updating the AP curriculum, when needed, with the most current topics and treatments taught at the university level. Committee members provide challenging yet pertinent questions each year that assess the skill levels of our students. I am hopeful that these lessons can bestow on both you and your students a renewed sense that economics is fun and worthwhile as a subject of study and enjoyment. 4 AP Economics: 2006–2007 Workshop Materials Special Focus: Mastering Economic Thinking Skills Focusing on Marginal Thinking and Game Theory in Microeconomics Eric Dodge Hanover College Hanover, Indiana The study, practice, and teaching of microeconomics has been fairly straightforward for many years. When teaching the subject at its most basic level, we attempt to explain how individual decision makers allocate scarce resources in the most efficient possible manner. The theoretical technique used to explain the decision-making process, marginal analysis, has been a part of the AP curriculum since the beginning, but it never hurts to reemphasize such a critical tool in any economist’s toolbox. This year, Dr. Pamela Schmitt of the United States Naval Academy has produced lesson
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